Transcription of 3. Securitization and Desecuritization
1 On Security, by Ronnie D. Lipschutz3. Securitization and DesecuritizationOle W verDuring the mid-1980s, observers frequently noticed that the concept of security had been subjected tolittle reflection in comparison with how much and how strongly it had been used. Only a few years later,conceptual reflections on the concept of security have become so common that it is almost embarrassingto, once again, discuss or re-conceptualize security . Nonetheless, in this chapter I present one possibleperspective on security, and assess its implications in terms of four different security agendas.
2 Myprimary aim here is not to provide a detailed discussion of this new approach--a more detailed expositioncan be found elsewhere1--but to illustrate the contrast between this perspective and more traditionalapproaches, which I intend to bring out via conceptual discussion and by addressing selected "securitydebates."I could begin by expressing a certain discontent with the "traditional progressive" or "established radical "ways of dealing with the concept and agenda of security. The traditional progressive approach is: 1) toaccept two basic premises of the established discourse, first that security is a reality prior to language, isout there (irrespective of whether the conception is "objective" or "subjective," is measured in terms ofthreat or fear), and second the more security, the better; and 2) to argue why security should encompassmore than is currently the case, including not only "xx" but also "yy," where the latter is environment,welfare, immigration and refugees, etc.
3 With this approach, one accepts the core meaning of "security" asuncontested, pushing instead in the direction of securitizing still larger areas of social , in the final analysis, is it all to the good that problems such as environmental degradation beaddressed in terms of security? After all, in spite of all the changes of the last few years, security, as withany other concept, carries with it a history and a set of connotations that it cannot escape. At the heart ofthe concept we still find something to do with defense and the state. As a result, addressing an issue insecurity terms still evokes an image of threat-defense, allocating to the state an important role inaddressing it.
4 This is not always an not turn this procedure upside down? In place of accepting implicitly the meaning of "security" asgiven and then attempting to broaden its coverage, why not try instead to put a mark on the conceptitself , by entering into and through its core? This means changing the tradition by taking it seriouslyrather than criticizing it from the I begin by considering security as a concept and a word. Next,I discuss security as a speech act . In the third part of the essay, I describe four cases of Securitization and de- Securitization . Finally, I ask whether we might not want to use "security" as it is classicallyunderstood, after : The Concept and the WordDuring the 1980s we witnessed a general move to broaden the security One approach was toOn Security: Chapter 3 (1 of 31) [8/11/2002 7:46:36 PM]move from a strict focus on the security of the state (national security) toward a broader or alternativefocus on the security of people , either as individuals or as a global or international collectivity.
5 Thesecurity of individuals can be affected in numerous ways; indeed, economic welfare, environmentalconcerns, cultural identity, and political rights are germane more often than military issues in this major problem with such an approach is deciding where to stop, since the concept of securityotherwise becomes a synonym for everything that is politically good or desirable. How, then, can we getany clear sense of the specific character of security issues, as distinct from other problems that beset thehuman condition? To what extent can we apply any of the methods and lessons of security studies to thisbroadened agenda?
6 Johan Galtung and Jan berg have formulated an alternative concept of security, based on four sets ofpositive goals related to human needs: survival, development, freedom, and identity. Within thisframework, security becomes "the combined defence policy for each need category, the totality ofdefence endeavours of the entire human-societal organization."4 The result is a holistic program forworld society and its development, welfare, and so on. This is a wholly legitimate approach, of course,but does it impinge at all on security debates? Certainly, the central actors and theorists in the field donot feel affected or threatened by this Moreover, there is no basic logic to this widerconception of security except for the corrective/mirror image of the traditional concept.
7 And, in addition,the baseline in the Galtung/ berg conception is the individual level. Security is then linked to all othergoals, since they are all generated from the individual level: the individual has various needs and can behurt by threats to these needs, and this makes everything a potential security problem. At least three,interrelated problems follow: First, the concept of security becomes all-inclusive and is thereby emptiedof content; second, the lack of explicit attention to the connotative core of classical security makes theGaltung/ berg approach an innocent contributor to the reproduction--and even expansion--ofsecuritization.
8 And, third, there is a lack of political effect on "security," as traditionally along the referent object axis--that is, saying that "security is not only military defense of thestate, it is also x and y and z"--has the unfortunate effect of expanding the security realm endlessly, untilit encompasses the whole social and political agenda. This is not, however, just an unhappy coincidenceor a temporary lack of clear thinking. The problem is that, as concepts, neither individual security norinternational security exist . National security, that is, the security of the state, is the name of an ongoingdebate, a tradition, an established set of practices and, as such, the concept has a rather formalizedreferent; conversely, the "security" of whomever/whatever is a very unclear idea.
9 There is no literature,no philosophy, no tradition of "security" in non-state terms; it is only as a critical idea, played out againstthe concept and practices of state security, that other threats and referents have any meaning. An abstractidea of "security" is a nonanalytical term bearing little relation to the concept of security implied bynational or state the extent that we have an idea of a specific modality labelled "security" it is because we think ofnational security and its modifications and limitations, and not because we think of the everyday word"security.
10 " The discourse on "alternative security" makes meaningful statements not by drawingprimarily on the register of everyday security but through its contrast with national security. Books andarticles such as Jan berg's At Sikre Udvikling og Udvikle Sikkerhed , Richard H. Ullman's "RedefiningSecurity," and Jessica Tuchman Mathews's "Redefining Security" are, consequently, abundant with "notonly," "also" and "more than" This reveals that they have no generic concept of the meaningof security--only the one uncritically borrowed from the traditional view, and multiplied and extended toOn Security: Chapter 3 (2 of 31) [8/11/2002 7:46:36 PM]new fields.